Recognition and management of rodent-borne infectious disease outbreaks after heavy rainfall and flooding.

J La State Med Soc

Professor in Department of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences, Schools of Public Health and Medicine, Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center in New Orleans.

Published: January 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Heavy rainfall and flooding after drought can lead to outbreaks of rodent-borne diseases like leptospirosis and hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, particularly in hurricane-prone areas like Louisiana.
  • Increased rain helps wild grass grow, attracting more rodents, which then invade human environments.
  • Clinicians should be aware of the symptoms and preventative measures related to these diseases, advocating for public health strategies to minimize human contact with rodents and their waste.

Article Abstract

Climatic events, especially heavy rains and flooding following periods of relative drought, have precipitated both arthropod-borne and rodent-borne infectious disease outbreaks. Heavy rainfall encourages excessive wild grass seed production that supports increased outdoor rodent populations, and flooding forces rodents from their burrows near water sources into the built environment and closer to humans. The objectives of this review are to alert clinicians to the climatic conditions common to hurricane-prone regions, such as Louisiana, that can precipitate outbreaks of the two rodent-borne diseases most often associated with periods of heavy rainfall and flooding, leptospirosis (LS) and hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS). It will also describe the epidemiology, presenting clinical manifestations and outcomes of these rodent-borne infectious diseases, and recommend both prophylactic therapies and effective control and prevention strategies for rodent-borne infectious disease outbreaks. Healthcare providers should maintain high levels of suspicion for LS in patients developing febrile illnesses after contaminated freshwater exposures during flooding or recreational events, and for HPS in patients with febrile illnesses that progress rapidly to respiratory failure following rodent exposures in enclosed spaces. Public health educational strategies should encourage limiting human contact with all wild and peridomestic rats and mice, avoiding all contact with rodent excreta, safely disposing of all rodent excreta, and modifying the built environment to deter rodents from colonizing households and workplaces.

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